Teen Management Advice and Self Determination
Good
grief, we need self-determination! Take time out for you. If you spend hours on
in with your child without a break, it is likely you will make bad choices with
raising your teenager. I am going to tell you a little secret. Children are
skillfully aware. They observe almost every darn thing around them and retain
information that sometimes pisses them off later. In other words, your teen
will remember everything you say, or do. Mostly however, many teenagers will
focus on your mistakes so they can hold it against you in the future to cover
their mistakes.
You
can avoid. Help your child realize that like him or her, you are only a human
being and that you will make mistakes. Help your child to see that mistakes are
part of the learning process, rather than a torturous enemy that will hinder
you from succeeding. Make allowances, and try to change your behaviors,
conduct, habits, etc so that your teenager does not have ammunition to use
against you later.
Once
you learn to reform your way of thinking, behaviors, habits, etc your child may
follow your lead more willingly. Nevertheless, there is more. What about how
you relate to your child? Let me bust on many parental and teachers mistake.
Commonly, parents, teachers, and many others make the same darn mistake over,
and over, and over, and over, and over again. Here is an outline of one of
these mistakes:
Mom –
Teacher – Mary why are you not doing your homework,
Mary –
I do not understand math,
Mom,
dad, and teacher – the problem is you do not want to understand. Your problem
is you give up –
Big,
major big mistake – Mary perhaps has a different way of learning skills that
parents and teachers must explore to encourage Mary to learn.
We all
are different, which means we learn differently. The problem in this instance
rests on the parents or teachers inabilities to relate to Mary, and to assess
the situation more closely to help Mary complete math. Therefore, Mary is not
in the wrong. On Mary’s behalf, I will say most parents or teachers will
automatically punish Mary for not doing her math homework. What these parents
and teachers are doing is discouraging Mary instead of giving her inspiration
to understand the problems.Let us try it together using the same problem.
Mom –
Teacher – Mary why are you not doing your homework,
Mary –
I do not understand math,
Mom
and/or teacher –
Mary,
are you having problems with your math quiz?
Mary –
Yes, I do not understand math. The questions seem too hard.
First,
Mary is correct, since math questions are often misleading, since each answer
is based on theories that present the closest answer to the problem. Therefore,
what we need to do is help Mary understand the complications of math. What
works for you, may not work for Mary, so keep this in mind when you are guiding
Mary to find the answers. Keep in mind that Mary learns differently than you
do.
You
want to keep in mind also that Mary may be dealing with several problems at
school and with growing up. The changes can cause confusion for teenagers. Try
to sit down and have a constructive talk with your teenager to clarify and make
sure that the child’s emotional state is not cluttered. What I mean by
cluttered is your child worried about something that may be bothering him or
her? Does your child deal with peer pressure causing him or her to struggle
with making good decisions? Do you leave room for your child to come to you
when he or she needs help?
Learn
the rules of T.E.T. or teaching education training by focusing on each peer’s
ability to learn. Let your child learn at his or her pace, rather than at your
pace or understanding of learning.
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